Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future

The purpose of this mixed methods study was twofold: (i) to examine how school infrastructure and learning complements can be better utilized to promote student learning in Indonesian schools; and (ii) to help the relevant ministries make more info...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sawamoto, Akiko, Marshall, Jeffery H.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/227561606808183776/Infrastructure-Learning-Complements-and-Student-Learning-Working-Together-for-a-Brighter-Future
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34890
id okr-10986-34890
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-348902021-04-23T14:02:10Z Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future Sawamoto, Akiko Marshall, Jeffery H. STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT EDUCATION TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT LITERACY LIBRARY SCIENCE EDUCATION EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY EDTECH DISTANCE EDUCATION SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE The purpose of this mixed methods study was twofold: (i) to examine how school infrastructure and learning complements can be better utilized to promote student learning in Indonesian schools; and (ii) to help the relevant ministries make more informed decisions about investment in school infrastructure and learning complements. Three analyses were conducted in the quantitative component: descriptive and comparative analyses of madrasah infrastructure, and a multivariate analysis of madrasah infrastructure and student achievement. The qualitative component employed the intentional sampling and positive‐deviance approach consisting of semi‐structured phone interviews with principals, teachers, librarians, and parents from 20 madrasah and non‐madrasah schools (11 high‐performing secondary schools with science laboratories and nine primary schools with libraries of which eight were supported by the innovation for Indonesia’s school children program, which aims to improve students’ literacy and numeracy skills). The results of the descriptive and comparative analyses indicated that the madrasah sector as a whole is not adequately equipped with basic physical and learning resource infrastructure and that private madrasahs have significantly lower levels of infrastructure than their public counterparts. However, the multivariate analysis results did not conclusively show that infrastructure directly contributes to student learning outcomes. The qualitative analysis found some promising learning practices related to teachers’ professional development, literacy initiatives, and customized teaching and learning. Nevertheless, challenges remain for many schools in the disconnect between pedagogical and infrastructural quality assurance mechanisms, the failure to fully exploit libraries as resources for student learning, and learning spaces and assets that are not sufficiently conducive to science education. Based on the study results and findings, this report offers four key steps to address the main challenges related to school infrastructure and learning complements: (i) prioritize resource allocation to basic physical and digital infrastructure for the most underserved groups of students; (ii) leverage educators to maximize their potential as catalysts in facilitating improved teaching and learning processes through an innovative and effective utilization of learning spaces and complements; (iii) streamline and strengthen quality assurance mechanisms to document, monitor, and assess the quality, condition, and use of infrastructure and related assets, and to improve the links between school infrastructure management and learning quality management; and (iv) increase the overall resilience of the education system to future crises by strengthening its capacity to coordinate, monitor, and manage the continued delivery of equitable education services through distance and hybrid learning. 2020-12-07T18:15:46Z 2020-12-07T18:15:46Z 2020-11-23 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/227561606808183776/Infrastructure-Learning-Complements-and-Student-Learning-Working-Together-for-a-Brighter-Future http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34890 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Education Study East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
EDUCATION
TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
LITERACY
LIBRARY
SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY
EDTECH
DISTANCE EDUCATION
SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE
spellingShingle STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
EDUCATION
TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
LITERACY
LIBRARY
SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY
EDTECH
DISTANCE EDUCATION
SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE
Sawamoto, Akiko
Marshall, Jeffery H.
Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
description The purpose of this mixed methods study was twofold: (i) to examine how school infrastructure and learning complements can be better utilized to promote student learning in Indonesian schools; and (ii) to help the relevant ministries make more informed decisions about investment in school infrastructure and learning complements. Three analyses were conducted in the quantitative component: descriptive and comparative analyses of madrasah infrastructure, and a multivariate analysis of madrasah infrastructure and student achievement. The qualitative component employed the intentional sampling and positive‐deviance approach consisting of semi‐structured phone interviews with principals, teachers, librarians, and parents from 20 madrasah and non‐madrasah schools (11 high‐performing secondary schools with science laboratories and nine primary schools with libraries of which eight were supported by the innovation for Indonesia’s school children program, which aims to improve students’ literacy and numeracy skills). The results of the descriptive and comparative analyses indicated that the madrasah sector as a whole is not adequately equipped with basic physical and learning resource infrastructure and that private madrasahs have significantly lower levels of infrastructure than their public counterparts. However, the multivariate analysis results did not conclusively show that infrastructure directly contributes to student learning outcomes. The qualitative analysis found some promising learning practices related to teachers’ professional development, literacy initiatives, and customized teaching and learning. Nevertheless, challenges remain for many schools in the disconnect between pedagogical and infrastructural quality assurance mechanisms, the failure to fully exploit libraries as resources for student learning, and learning spaces and assets that are not sufficiently conducive to science education. Based on the study results and findings, this report offers four key steps to address the main challenges related to school infrastructure and learning complements: (i) prioritize resource allocation to basic physical and digital infrastructure for the most underserved groups of students; (ii) leverage educators to maximize their potential as catalysts in facilitating improved teaching and learning processes through an innovative and effective utilization of learning spaces and complements; (iii) streamline and strengthen quality assurance mechanisms to document, monitor, and assess the quality, condition, and use of infrastructure and related assets, and to improve the links between school infrastructure management and learning quality management; and (iv) increase the overall resilience of the education system to future crises by strengthening its capacity to coordinate, monitor, and manage the continued delivery of equitable education services through distance and hybrid learning.
format Report
author Sawamoto, Akiko
Marshall, Jeffery H.
author_facet Sawamoto, Akiko
Marshall, Jeffery H.
author_sort Sawamoto, Akiko
title Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
title_short Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
title_full Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
title_fullStr Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
title_full_unstemmed Infrastructure, Learning Complements, and Student Learning : Working Together for a Brighter Future
title_sort infrastructure, learning complements, and student learning : working together for a brighter future
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/227561606808183776/Infrastructure-Learning-Complements-and-Student-Learning-Working-Together-for-a-Brighter-Future
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34890
_version_ 1764481870646476800